MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - White Dust (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: January 8, 2024In the summer of 2014, a man named Mark Porter sat in the small lobby of a quick service oil change garage. As he waited for his oil change to wrap up, he sipped a cup of coffee and looked ou...t the window. But a minute later, a strange man walked into the shop and despite there being plenty of empty seats, the man sat down right next to Mark. Mark thought this was odd, but he tried not to over think it and just kept on sipping his coffee. The strange man started talking to Mark, just small talk, and Mark responded politely. But when his car was finally done, Mark was very relieved to grab his keys and get out of there. As Mark drove home, he couldn't help but feel like that strange guy was off in some way, there had to be a reason why he just randomly sat down next to Mark despite the open seats, and then why had he tried so hard to strike up a conversation? It all just seemed very odd but by the time Mark got home, he had forgotten about the guy. However, the guy had not forgotten about Mark, because Mark was right to be suspicious. That strange man had a very specific reason for doing what he did, and it was about to have massive ripple effects.For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In the summer of 2014, a middle-aged man named Mark
sat in the small lobby of a quick-service oil change garage.
As he waited for his oil change to wrap up,
Mark sipped on a cup of coffee and stared out the window.
But a minute later, a strange man who Mark didn't know
walked into the shop and despite there being plenty of empty seats,
this man sat down right next to Mark.
Mark thought this was very strange,
but he tried not to overthink it and just nodded politely to the guy
and Mark just kept on sipping his coffee and looking out the window.
But then the strange man started talking to Mark,
just small talk,
and Mark responded politely, but it really seemed like this guy was trying so hard to strike up a conversation with Mark. Finally, when Mark's car was done, Mark was very relieved to grab his keys
and get out of there. And as Mark drove home, he couldn't help but feel like that strange guy was
just off in some way. Like there had to be a reason why he sat
down next to Mark despite the open seats and then had tried so hard to strike up a conversation.
It all just seemed so weird. But by the time Mark got home, he had forgotten about the guy.
However, the strange guy had not forgotten about Mark. Because Mark was right to be suspicious.
That strange man had a very specific reason for doing what he did.
And what he did was about to have massive ripple effects.
But before we get into that story,
if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious delivered in story format,
then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we do
and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So if that's of interest to
you, the next time the Amazon Music Follow button asks you if they can borrow your chapstick,
say yes and hand it over, but don't tell them that you've secretly replaced the actual chapstick
with a glue stick. Okay, let's get into today's story. I'm Peter Frankopan
and I'm Afua Hirsch
and we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me.
Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all time,
somebody who's had a huge impact on me,
who I think objectively stands apart for the level of her talent,
the audacity of her message. If I was a first year at university, the first time I sat down
and really listened to her and engaged with her message, it totally floored me. And the
truth and pain and messiness of her struggle, that's all captured in unforgettable music that has stood
the test of time. Think that's fair, Peter? I mean, the way in which her music comes across
is so powerful, no matter what song it is. So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
Hello, I'm Emily, and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No? Short shorts? Free cocktails? Careless whispers?
OK, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right, it's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all.
But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making
with a secret he feels would ruin him if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts
or listen early and ad-free on Wanderie Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wanderie app. On a cool Saturday afternoon in April of 2014,
60-year-old Gary Terrell was crouched down in the dirt
pulling weeds from his beautiful backyard garden.
Even though it was only about 50 degrees Fahrenheit,
Gary could still feel
a bead of sweat dripping down his forehead. Gary also felt a slight ache in his back, and he laughed
at himself because digging in the dirt apparently was not as easy as when he was younger. But even
with the sweat and the muscle aches, there was still no place Gary would rather be than in his
garden on a pretty spring day. Gary and his wife Jan had lived in their house in Springfield, Missouri for over 20 years,
and the house itself looked a lot like the other homes in their small suburban neighborhood.
It was red brick with a large first floor and a basement,
but the landscaping at Gary and Jan's house made it stand out from all the other houses in the area.
Landscaping had always been a passion for Gary and Jan.
They had spent years working on their flower and vegetable gardens in the back,
and they had filled the front yard with plants and various design accents
like a concrete bench with cupids and hearts carved into it.
Gary slipped off his gardening gloves, stood up, and stretched out his back.
Gary was average height with graying hair and a receding hairline.
Gary heard the back door open, so he turned and he saw his wife Jan walking towards him.
She was carrying a glass of water and she had a big smile on her face like she usually did.
Jan was 61 years old.
She had brown hair down to her shoulders and she wore glasses.
When Jan reached Gary, she handed him the glass of water and told him he should really take a break.
When Jan reached Gary, she handed him the glass of water and told him he should really take a break.
So they sat down together on a bench,
and they talked about what else they could plant to add even more color to their gardens.
Then Jan took Gary's hand, and they sat there quietly, just looking out over their perfect yard.
The truth was, the garden was much more than just another landscaping project to Gary and Jan.
It had been like a sanctuary to them for years. Gary and Jan
had met and fallen in love over 30 years earlier in the 1980s. Soon after they had gotten married,
they started a family, first welcoming their daughter Jessica and then their son Jimmy. But
when Jimmy was only a toddler, Gary and Jan had gotten the worst news they could imagine.
Their little boy had been diagnosed with cancer. After Jimmy's diagnosis, Gary and Jan had gotten the worst news they could imagine. Their little boy had been diagnosed with cancer.
After Jimmy's diagnosis, Gary and Jan had moved to the house in Springfield to be closer to medical facilities for their son's treatments. But unfortunately, at the age of three, Jimmy had
passed away. Gary and Jan knew they would never get over the death of their son. But the garden
they started in the backyard of their home became their quiet, beautiful place where they could go and sit and remember their son. And soon,
it became a place where they could retreat from stress and pain and just spend time together.
It really was their sanctuary. Over the years, Gary and Jan had started to heal as best as they could
from the terrible loss of their son, and they both turned their grief into a desire to help others. Gary had dedicated his life to education and working
with children. He had been a history teacher, a school principal, and then he had gone on to serve
as the assistant superintendent in his school's district. Jan volunteered her time sewing and
crocheting for cancer patients, and even though nobody other than Gary knew, Jan also paid for milk and food items at the local school cafeterias to help cover
the costs for kids who couldn't afford to buy those things on their own. And even after Gary
had retired from working in the school district for decades, he wanted to remain an educator.
So he had taken a position at a local college as an adjunct history instructor.
So as much as Gary and Jan loved to escape from the stress and grief of life by going into their garden,
they both still believed it was their job to stay engaged in their community and to help others as much as they could.
In the garden, Gary finished his water and cleaned up his supplies.
Then he and his wife went inside their house.
Jan sat down on the living room couch and called their daughter Jessica.
Jessica was in her late 20s,
and she lived about 300 miles away in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Jan and Gary still talked to their daughter just about every single day.
Jessica would call her mom every morning, and her dad would text her every night before he went to bed.
But lately,
Jessica and Jan had been on the phone with each other even more than usual because Jessica was
planning her wedding. And that day, Jan had called Jessica to set up a time for them to go wedding
dress shopping together. They decided Jessica would drive up to Missouri in a couple of weeks,
stay with her parents, and she and Jan would shop for as long as they needed until she found the perfect dress. While Jan talked to Jessica on the phone, Gary made his way through the first floor
of the house towards his home office. It was true that the outside landscaping Gary and Jan had done
over the years really did set their house apart, but the inside of their house was also very
different from other homes. In fact, the inside of their home wasn't
like anything anyone in the neighborhood had ever seen. The inside of Gary and Jan's house was like
a small museum or a curiosity shop filled with all kinds of rare items. Gary loved world history.
That's why he continued to teach the subject even after he had technically retired.
But Gary's love of history had also
turned him into an avid collector. At first, Gary had begun collecting things like old books or
rare furniture pieces he found at garage sales. But over the years, Gary's collecting had turned
into something way bigger than just a hobby. The walls on the first floor of the house were
covered with shelves. And those shelves displayed antique handguns and rifles, Native American spearheads, first edition books, jars filled with old coins
from all over the world, and countless other collectibles. On his way to his office, Gary
stopped for a second in front of a large wooden table that displayed his prized possession,
three rare 19th century scrimshaw walrus tusks. Scrimshaw was the art of hand
carving detailed pictures or intricate designs into bone or ivory objects like whale and walrus
tusks. Gary looked at his prized tusks and he smiled. Each one was worth about 10,000 US dollars,
but their monetary value was not really why Gary loved them so much. As a collector, he had to work hard to track down these kinds of very rare items.
He combed through catalogs, visited antique dealers, talked to other collectors,
and still went to local garage and estate sales in search of rarities.
So these three scrimshaw tusks represented a lot of time and effort by Gary.
And the artwork and craftsmanship of
these three pieces just totally blew Gary away. Gary stepped away from the walrus tusk display,
walked down a hallway, and went into his office. The shelves in his office were overflowing with
books. Some were hard to find and long out of print, and others were just books about history
that Gary enjoyed reading.
Gary sat down at his desk, and he reached over into a jar that was filled with all these silver coins.
Like the walrus tusks, most of these coins were very rare and worth a lot of money, and Gary was on a mission to catalog all of them.
Cataloging items in his collection made it much easier for him to trade with other collectors,
Cataloging items in his collection made it much easier for him to trade with other collectors because that way he knew exactly what he had,
and he could give others a description of all the objects he owned.
But cataloging coins was also kind of like sitting in the garden for Gary.
There was something about the sound the coins made when they clinked against each other,
and the time it took to determine exactly when and where each coin was from
that brought Gary a real sense of peace.
determine exactly when and where each coin was from that brought Gary a real sense of peace.
Gary wasn't sure how long he'd been sitting at his desk cataloging these rare coins when his phone buzzed in his pocket and it sort of snapped him out of his peaceful trance. He grabbed his
phone and glanced down at the number that was calling him and he saw it belonged to one of his
closest friends, Mark Porter. Mark had been the superintendent of the school district
back when Gary was the assistant superintendent, and the two men had gotten along really well.
It turned out that Mark shared Gary's interest in collecting coins, so the two men had remained
close friends even after they both had retired. Gary and Mark talked for a few minutes about maybe
getting together for dinner soon, and then Mark asked how Gary's work with his latest coin collection was going. The truth was, Mark loved that Gary had this huge collection
to spend his time on, but Mark also worried that Gary was a little naive about the world he'd been
drawn into. Most collectors and antique dealers were like Gary. They were good people who just
had a real love of history. But there were some people who saw collectors like
Gary as very easy targets because they were in possession of items that were worth a ton of money.
And there were times when Mark worried if Gary really knew enough about the different people
he was reaching out to in order to make potential buys or trades with. You know, it wasn't really
clear if Gary actually understood if these business partners of his were good people
with good intentions or not. On the phone, Gary told Mark that everything was going great with
cataloging his coins and he'd be able to see if anyone was interested in buying them soon.
And he reassured Mark that he would only work with reputable collectible coin dealers when the time
came to actually sell them. Then the two friends agreed to meet for dinner the following week,
and they said goodbye.
Not long after Gary hung up on Mark,
Jan walked into the office,
and she told Gary that their daughter, Jessica,
would be coming up from Oklahoma soon to go shopping for her wedding dress.
Gary stood up, and he had a huge grin on his face.
He loved when his daughter came to visit,
and he knew how happy it made Jan to spend
time with their daughter. Gary put his arm around Jan, and the two of them walked out of the office
and into the living room. They sat down on the couch, and Jan leaned her head on Gary's shoulder.
Gary and Jan had been together over 30 years, and they had been through some really horrible
things together, but they had come out on the other side.
They were happy and healthy and just as much in love with each other
as they had been on the day they first got married.
A few days later, on April 30th, 2014,
Gary kissed Jan by the door that led to their garage,
and then Gary headed out to his car.
He was going to head out to teach one of his classes at the local college.
Jan watched as Gary pulled out of the garage and headed down the driveway, and then once he was
gone, Jan shut the garage door and then walked back inside into the living room. She sat down
on the couch and called her daughter Jessica. They talked about Jessica's wedding planning,
and Jan reminded her that if she needed help with anything, all she had to do was ask.
planning, and Jan reminded her that if she needed help with anything, all she had to do was ask.
Jessica's house in Oklahoma City was only about a five-hour drive to Jan and Gary's,
and they did see each other fairly often. But Jan secretly wished that Jessica and her fiancé lived closer. And even though Jan didn't say this, she really hoped when Jessica had children of her
own, she would move back to Springfield, because Jan would
want to be as close to her grandkids as possible. Jan and Jessica talked for a bit longer, and then
Jan told her daughter she loved her and she couldn't wait to see her. Jan hung up her phone
and then walked across the first floor to the basement door. Now, while she and Gary did call
the basement the basement, in reality, it really wasn't.
It had been converted into another living space years earlier, complete with a small kitchen, so it was kind of like an apartment.
Jan walked down the stairs and into the basement kitchen.
She spent a lot of time down there canning vegetables.
Jan didn't take canning as seriously as Gary took his collecting, but it was still a hobby she loved.
But before Jan could get started canning that day, she thought she heard footsteps upstairs.
She knew she'd been on the phone with Jessica for a while,
but she still thought it was way too early for Gary to be home from his class.
Jan walked over to the basement steps and called upstairs to see if maybe Gary was there,
but nobody called back.
Then Jan heard heavy
footsteps running across the floor right above her, and suddenly her breath was caught in her chest
and she felt scared. Then the basement door at the top of the stairs swung open,
and Jan looked up and saw someone running down the stairs right at her. To be continued... story of a British man who took part in the first ever round the world sailing race. Good on him,
I hear you say. But there is a problem, as there always is in this show. The man in question
hadn't actually sailed before. Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy. Oh, and also tiny little detail
almost didn't mention it. He bet his family home on making it to the finish line. What ensued was
one of the most complex cheating plots in British sporting history.
To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed
red wound on his arm and he seemed really unwell. So she wound up taking him to the hospital right
away so he could get treatment. While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription, Dorothy went
to grab her car to pick him up at the exit. But she would never be seen alive again, leaving us
to wonder, decades later, what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott?
From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases like this one
and so many more. Every week, hosts Aaron and Justin sit down to discuss a new case covering
every angle and theory, walking through the forensic evidence, and interviewing those close
to the case to try and discover what really happened. And with over 450 episodes, there's a case for every true crime listener.
Follow the Generation Y podcast on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
The next day, on May 1st, 2014, Jessica, Gary and Jan's daughter, nervously tapped her foot
and stared down at her phone inside of her house in Oklahoma City. Jessica was starting to panic
because she hadn't heard from either of her parents since she'd talked to her mom the day before.
And that wasn't normal. Her dad always texted her to say goodnight no matter where he was or what
he was doing, and he didn't do that the night before and she talked to her mom every morning and that morning she had not heard from her mom
jessica's fiance jason tried to calm her down he was sure there was a totally normal explanation
for why gary and jan had stopped being in touch maybe they fell asleep early the night before
and maybe slept in this morning but But Jessica just couldn't believe that.
She knew something was wrong, and so she couldn't relax. Jessica and her mom looked a lot alike.
They had the exact same smile, but Jessica had blonde highlights and her shoulder-length brown
hair. On this day, Jessica wore a gray sweatshirt and jeans. As for Jessica's fiance, Jason, he was
a big guy, and he was what some people might call the strong silent type.
In their Oklahoma City living room, Jessica got up and started to pace back and forth.
At noon, she still had not heard from her parents, and so she really began to feel worried.
By this point, Jason could see how upset his fiance was, and so he told her, you know, just call the police up in
Springfield and ask them to do a wellness check on your parents. This would mean a police officer
would go to Jan and Gary's house and just knock on the door and make sure everything was okay.
Jessica looked up the non-emergency number for the Springfield Police Department,
and she gave them a call. She told them she was really worried about her parents,
and she gave them her parents' address. them she was really worried about her parents,
and she gave them her parents' address. The officer on the other line assured her they would send somebody over to the house immediately. Jessica hung up the phone and then sat back down
and waited. It felt like hours had passed, but in reality, the police called Jessica back pretty
quickly. An officer told Jessica that they had gone by her parents'
house, and while they didn't actually talk to her parents, nothing seemed out of the ordinary about
their home. The doors were all locked, there was no sign of forced entry anywhere, I mean,
the house looked totally normal. Jessica thanked the officer for going over and looking around,
but after she hung up, she told Jason that that was not good enough for her.
She was sure there was something wrong and somebody actually needed to speak to her parents.
Jessica tried calling both of her parents again, but again, neither of them answered.
So, Jessica told Jason that they needed to drive to Springfield to see in person what was going on here.
see in person what was going on here. So at about 2 p.m. that day, Jessica and Jason walked outside to their car to begin the five-hour drive to Springfield. Jason drove as fast as he could,
and he and Jessica barely spoke on the ride. And then just a little before 7 p.m., Jason pulled
the car into Gary and Jan's driveway. Right away, Jessica reached into her purse and she took out the garage door opener
she had for her parents' house.
She pressed the button
and she and Jason watched
as the garage door opened up
and inside, Jessica saw
both of her parents' cars were parked.
And when Jessica saw that,
she turned to Jason
and she said now she was certain
something terrible had happened.
Jessica slowly got out of the car, but she didn't dare go inside the house.
Instead, she dialed 911 and waited outside for the police to arrive.
A few minutes after Jessica called 911, a police cruiser arrived in front of the house.
A few minutes after Jessica called 911, a police cruiser arrived in front of the house.
Two uniformed officers stepped out of the car and approached Jessica and Jason, who were still standing outside in front of the house.
The officers saw the garage door was open and that there were two cars parked inside.
The officers asked Jessica and Jason if either of them had gone into the house.
Jessica said they hadn't, but she was sure something was wrong. She also told them the door that led into the house from the garage was always
unlocked. The officers told Jessica to wait outside, and then they walked into the garage.
Jessica was right, the door in the garage leading into the house was unlocked.
So the officers walked through that door into the house and made their way down a hallway towards the front of the house. And not far
from the front door, they saw a man's body lying in a pool of blood with a gunshot wound to his chest.
As soon as they saw this, one of the officers called into the station, and then both officers
drew their guns and began slowly making their way through the
rest of the first floor. The officers were tense. They had no idea if the shooter was still in the
house. They didn't find anyone else on the first floor, so they made their way to the basement door,
they opened it up, and began going down the stairs again with their guns drawn.
But before even making it halfway down the steps, the officers saw another body. It was a
woman lying face down on the floor below. Even from a distance, they could see a gaping wound
in the back of her head. Later that evening, Jessica and her fiancé Jason were still anxiously
waiting outside. But this whole time, they had stood there and watched multiple police cruisers
arrive one after another, and they had watched as police officers blocked off Jessica's parents'
house with yellow police tape. One officer had told Jessica and Jason that two bodies had been
found inside of the house, but those bodies had not been identified yet. However, Jessica knew it had to be her parents,
and she'd be right.
In the darkness, Jessica watched another car
pull up in front of the house.
This one was not a police cruiser, but a sedan.
And out of the sedan came two tall, thin men
wearing suits with buzzed brown hair.
In the low light, the two men could easily pass as brothers.
The men approached Jessica and Jason and introduced themselves as detectives Chris Barb and Neil McCamus of the Springfield
Police. Like the first officers on the scene, the detectives learned that Jessica and Jason had not
gone inside of the house before or after they called 911. Barb and McAmis asked them to continue waiting outside,
and then the two detectives made their way inside of the house.
Once they were inside,
they joined the state forensics officers in the front room
where Gary's body was lying.
The detectives were immediately taken aback
by the amount of blood that had pooled around his body,
and they soon discovered that Gary had been shot
and bludgeoned. While this type of violence was shocking to see, even for these experienced
detectives, there were a couple of other things about the scene that really stood out to them.
Gary's pants were pulled down to about the middle of his thighs, but Barb and McAnus didn't think
it looked like someone had tried to undress Gary. Instead, they thought maybe someone might have dug through Gary's pockets after he was dead,
and Gary's pants had sort of slipped off his waist.
But Gary's pants being down were not remotely the strangest aspect about the scene.
Forensics officers had found white dust and flakes all over Gary's body.
It was clear to investigators that the dust was not cocaine
or any other kind of drug, but they had no idea what it was. So, as forensics officers collected
samples of the white dust for testing, detectives Barb and McCamus followed a uniformed officer
across the first floor and down to the basement. At the bottom of the stairs, another forensics
officer was crouched over Jan's body.
Barb asked if the wounds on Jan's body matched the ones on Gary upstairs,
and the officer said, only partially, because Jan had not been shot like Gary had been.
Barb and McAmis crouched down, and just like upstairs, they saw the same white dust and flakes.
They also saw a latex glove turned inside out on the floor, not far from Jan's body.
The detectives left the forensics team to do their work in the basement, and they made their way back upstairs and through the rest of the house. Eventually, they went into the garage, and they
saw a concrete floor-to-ceiling tornado shelter standing in the corner. Garage shelters like that
were pretty common in the area, because Missouri was part of what's often called Tornado Alley, an area of the United States that experiences a ton
of tornadoes. But detectives Barb and McCamus noticed something strange about this tornado
shelter right away. A combination lock had been added to the structure. While locks were not out
of the ordinary for outdoor shelters, they weren't that
common in garage shelters, because the idea that during a tornado, people would rush into their
garage to get in their shelter and then have to fiddle around with a lock first just felt really
unnecessary. And so Barb and McCamus walked over to the shelter to get a better look at this lock,
and when they got there, it was clear someone had struck that lock
over and over again
in a failed attempt to get it to open.
So the detectives were pretty sure
that Gary and Jan had converted this tornado shelter
into a sort of safe, hence the lock.
And then whoever had killed them
had then tried to break into this safe,
meaning whoever had killed them
knew Gary and Jan had converted the shelter
into a safe, they knew where the safe was, and they very likely had an idea of what was inside of it.
And so, for Detectives Barb and McAmmis, there was now one very obvious suspect, Gary and Jan's
daughter, Jessica, who had apparently been so worried about her parents that she drove five hours to check on them,
but apparently not worried enough to actually go inside the house.
Late at night on May 1st,
so a few hours after police had arrived at Gary and Jan's house,
Detective Barb led Jessica and Jason into a small interrogation room at the police station.
Barb motioned to a small wooden table that was pushed up against a wall
that looked like it hadn't been repainted in decades.
Jessica and Jason sat down at that table, and then Barb took a seat across from them.
Barb was calm and measured and he told Jessica how sorry he was about her loss,
but he made it clear there were a few things that seemed really strange to him.
Barb couldn't understand why Jessica and Jason had driven all the way from Oklahoma only to arrive
at Jessica's parents' house, and then Jessica
doesn't go inside to see if her parents need any help? But all Jessica would say in response to this
was that as soon as she saw her parents' cars were in the garage, she knew something terrible
had happened, and she didn't want to see it. And that was why she had just called the police and
waited outside. Detective Barb nodded and jotted down a few notes on a pad of paper.
Barb's face never gave anything away,
but Jessica's reasoning still seemed very odd to him.
And in fact, he had heard answers like Jessica's before.
In murder cases, Barb had come into contact with people
who left the scene after they had killed their victims
and then contacted police to try to remove suspicion from themselves.
But these killers would pretend they had not even seen the victims because they simply could not
confront what they had done. So they would say things like they knew something was wrong,
but that they had no idea what police would actually find inside, when in reality, of course
they would know. And that's exactly what Jessica's response sounded like to Detective Barb.
Now, he was not ready to just declare Jessica guilty,
but he definitely still considered her a major suspect despite her explanation.
Because in addition to her strange behavior at the house,
Barb and his team had discovered some very important information
since they had arrived at Jan and Gary's house
that really only began to point more suspicion at Jessica.
It turned out that Gary's collection of rare and historical items
was worth hundreds of thousands of US dollars.
And like police thought,
Gary and Jan had converted that garage tornado shelter into a safe,
and that safe held tens of thousands of dollars worth of gold and silver. So, Detective
Barb knew that Jessica was the only child of wealthy parents, and she stood to inherit a lot
of money when her parents died. In the interrogation room, Barb's voice remained totally calm,
almost casual, like he was talking to a friend. He asked Jessica if she was angry at her parents
for any reason, but Jessica just looked at him He asked Jessica if she was angry at her parents for any
reason. But Jessica just looked at him and shook her head no. She said her parents were her whole
life. Then, Barb asked her if she had resented her parents for keeping their money from her or
anything like that. And a confused and almost angry look suddenly came across Jessica's face.
She told Barb that if she ever wanted money, or anything else from her parents for that matter,
all she had to do was ask and they'd give it to her. Barb thanked Jessica and Jason for coming in
and then he let them go. Jessica might be a prime suspect, but Barb knew he needed a lot more
evidence to be able to hold her. So Detective Barb and McCammis regrouped and started to put
together a list of people who were close to Gary and Jan and who might have information about the crime or about Jessica. And the first person they wanted to talk
to was Gary's friend and fellow collector, Mark Porter. At 7 p.m. on May 2nd, the day after Gary
and Jan's bodies had been discovered, Mark Porter sat in an interrogation room
similar to the one Jessica and Jason had been in the day before.
Mark was 53 years old,
and he was tall and handsome with salt and pepper hair.
Detective Barb was once again handling the interview,
and he asked Mark if he knew of any friends or family
that might have wanted to harm Gary and Jan.
But Mark shot down that idea right away.
People in the community loved Gary and Jan
because they both spent so much of their time helping other people. And Mark said as for their
daughter Jessica, she loved her parents and had a great relationship with them. Before Barb could
press him further, Mark said there was a much more obvious path investigators should be following.
Mark said he was almost positive that Gary and
Jan had been killed because of something having to do with Gary's collection. And he added that
someone could have stolen stuff from Gary worth thousands of dollars and it would be almost
impossible to know it was missing because Gary had amassed such a large collection of all different
kinds of rare items. Then Mark shook his head and fell silent. Detective Barb asked him what was
wrong, and Mark just kept shaking his head. Then he looked up at Barb and said that he had seen at
least one text message exchange between Gary and a potential buyer, and something about this
exchange had just seemed off to Mark. Mark told Barb that he had tried to warn Gary not to go
into business with this guy in the text messages, but now Mark said he wished he had tried to warn Gary not to go into business with this guy in the text messages,
but now Mark said he wished he had really pushed Gary to truly walk away from that deal.
Detective Barb thanked Mark for his time and for the information he'd provided.
And after Mark left, Barb met with the rest of the investigative team.
None of the investigative team were familiar with the world of collectors that Gary and Mark and others were a part of,
but they all knew that when it came to things worth a lot of money,
there were going to be people involved who would do anything to other people to get their hands on those items.
Now, Barb needed to figure out if something one of the collectibles or multiple collectibles were missing from Gary's house.
something one of the collectibles or multiple collectibles were missing from Gary's house.
Police could go through Gary's catalogs, but there was no guarantee that everything Gary had ever collected would be listed in those catalogs, so this was going to be a really
difficult chore. So Barb reached out to Gary's brother to see if maybe he could help. Gary's
brother was a respected attorney in the area, and he was probably more familiar with Gary's brother was a respected attorney in the area, and he was probably more familiar with Gary's complete collection than anyone, because he had helped Gary with legal and financial issues related to collecting some of these rare objects.
and investigators started focusing on the murders as possibly being the result of a robbery,
and they hoped either Gary's brother or the test results from the mysterious white dust they were waiting on would lead them to the killer.
On May 10th, so 10 days after Jan and Gary's murders,
their daughter Jessica stood at the front of a massive crowd that had gathered inside of a high school gym.
The outpouring of love for Jan and Gary from the community had been overwhelming,
and it became clear that a funeral home would not be large enough to accommodate everybody who wanted to pay their respects to Gary and Jan.
So the school district, where Gary had worked for decades,
let the family use a local high school gym for a memorial service.
for decades, let the family use a local high school gym for a memorial service. But as Jessica listened to friends and other family members talk about how much her parents had meant to them,
one thought kept coming into her mind. This was the day she was supposed to go dress shopping
with her mom, and now her parents wouldn't even get to be there for her wedding, and they would
never get to meet their grandkids. Jessica just started sobbing, and Jason wrapped his arms around her and pulled her face to his chest.
The fact that Jessica had lost her parents was devastating,
but Jason could not believe that on top of that,
she also had to endure being a primary suspect in their murders.
After the service was over,
Jason stood by Jessica outside the gym
as she greeted people she had known since she was a kid, and most of them were also appalled that she was being treated like a suspect. Finally, Jessica's
uncle, so Gary's brother, approached them and gave Jessica a hug. He didn't believe Jessica would ever
do anything to hurt her parents, but as an attorney, he understood why police had focused on her.
After all, she was the sole heir to her parents' fortune,
and she had acted a little strange at their house on the day that Gary and Jan's bodies were discovered.
But he was sure Jessica would soon be crossed off the suspect list,
and he was also determined to help police discover if anything really had been stolen from Gary's collection.
In the following weeks, with Gary's brother's help,
investigators started to believe they were getting closer to identifying Jan and Gary's collection. In the following weeks, with Gary's brother's help, investigators started to believe
they were getting closer
to identifying Jan and Gary's killer.
But they still needed more evidence
to be sure they were right
and to create an airtight case
that would actually hold up in court.
But as more time passed,
the people who were closest to Gary and Jan
put added pressure on the police
because they felt like the investigation had started to drag. And on top of that, some of Gary and Jan put added pressure on the police because they felt like the investigation
had started to drag. And on top of that, some of Gary and Jan's friends and neighbors had begun to
get frightened because they had no idea if Gary and Jan had been the killer's only target or if
they too were also in danger. Three months after Jan and Gary's murder, Gary's friend, Mark Porter, sat in the small lobby of a quick-service oil change garage.
Mark sipped on a cup of coffee from a fast food restaurant and waited for his oil change to be finished.
Then a man walked in and sat down right next to Mark, which was odd because there were plenty of other seats available in the lobby.
But Mark didn't think too much about it. He just kept drinking his coffee.
Then this man started to talk to Mark.
It was just small talk and Mark responded politely.
Finally, Mark heard someone behind the counter call his name.
Mark put down his coffee,
nodded to the stranger who had been talking to him,
paid for his oil change,
and then went outside to his car.
But as Mark drove away,
he got this weird, uneasy feeling in his stomach.
Who was that guy?
And why had he sat down right next to him
and just started talking to him?
It just felt odd.
When Mark got home,
he started to worry that that strange guy
might be somehow connected to the murders of Gary and Jan.
But as Mark continued to fret over the next few days
about this mystery guy and what he meant,
detectives Barb and McAmis decided they were ready to make an arrest. Because they now knew what had
been stolen from Gary's collection, and they knew what that mysterious white dust was that was found
at the scene. So they were sure about who had killed Gary and Jan, and how they had done it.
Based on evidence found at the murder scene,
interviews conducted throughout the investigation,
and the test results from the white dust and flakes found inside of Gary and Jan's home,
here is a reconstruction of what police believe happened
on the night of April 30th, 2014, when someone murdered Gary and Jan's home, here is a reconstruction of what police believe happened on the night of April 30,
2014, when someone murdered Gary and Jan Terrell. It was still light outside, so the killer casually
walked up to Jane and Gary's front door as if they were just there for a visit.
They had a large gym bag with them slung over their shoulder.
From the porch, the killer glanced over their shoulder to make sure none of the neighbors were outside.
Satisfied, the killer reached into their pants pocket and pulled out a pair of latex gloves.
The killer slipped on the gloves and then reached into their other pocket and pulled out a key.
They used that key to open the door and they stepped inside.
The house was quiet.
The killer started down the hallway towards Gary's office,
but then they heard a voice calling from downstairs in the basement.
The killer froze and started to panic.
Then the voice in the basement called out again,
at which point the killer made a decision on the spot.
The killer rushed to a wooden table nearby and grabbed one of those three scrimshaw walrus tusks that were on display.
Then the killer, carrying one of those tusks, ran across the first floor towards the basement.
They flung open the basement door and quickly descended the stairs. In the basement, Jan,
who was the one calling upstairs, she began to scream. She saw the
killer rushing towards her, so she turned away from the stairs, but there was nowhere for her to go.
The killer reached the bottom of the stairs and caught up to Jan.
They clutched that walrus tusk in both hands like a baseball bat, and then they swung.
The tusk cracked the back of Jan's head and she fell face down onto the floor.
Blood immediately spilled from the wound, but the killer thought they could still hear her breathing.
So the killer stood over Jan's body, raised up the walrus tusk again,
and slammed it back down into the back of Jan's head multiple times.
With each blow to the back of Jan's head, white dust and flakes fell off of that tusk.
It would later be determined that the killer had used so much force when smashing Jan's head with that tusk
that pieces of Jan's hair were literally embedded into her skull.
Finally, the killer stopped smashing Jan's head with the tusk.
They stood there for a second and then went back to the basement stairs and headed back up to the first floor.
Everything had happened so quickly that the killer didn't realize one of their latex gloves had slipped off their hand and fallen near Jan's body.
Upstairs, the killer made their way past the front door, down the hall, and into Gary's office, still clutching the bloody tusk in one of their hands.
Once in the office, they grabbed something off the desk, opened up their bag, and dropped it inside.
But before the killer could take anything else, they heard the front door open.
Again, the killer froze up and began to panic.
Then they made another split decision.
They opened up one of the desk drawers,
pulled out a handgun that was inside,
and then ran out of the office down the hall.
When the killer got to the front door,
Gary, who was the one who had opened the door,
he was standing there and he was calling out for his wife.
The killer shouted at Gary and Gary turned to see them,
at which point the killer raised the gun and fired.
The bullet struck Gary in the chest.
Blood spattered across Gary's clothes, and he fell to the floor.
The killer had no idea if Gary was alive or dead,
but they weren't going to take any chances,
so they stood over him, raised up the walrus tusk, and smashed Gary with it.
Again, white flakes and dusk from the tusk fell to the floor.
Eventually, the killer stopped bludgeoning Gary
and just stood there in the front room,
breathing heavily and feeling totally crazed.
Gary and Jan were now dead.
The killer tried to collect themselves and calm down their breathing.
Then they slipped the tusk and the gun into their bag. They got down on the floor and reached into Gary's pockets, searching for money
or other valuables. Gary's pants slid down his legs as the killer did this, but the killer did
not find anything of note in Gary's pockets. So, the killer walked back through the house and went
into the garage. There, they grabbed a hammer from Gary's tool rack and then walked over to that tornado shelter that they knew had gold and silver inside,
and the killer began smashing at the lock with the hammer. But when it became clear that they
could not break this lock, the killer just put the hammer back and went back inside the house.
They walked past Gary's body, opened the front door, and stepped outside.
It had gotten darker outside, but there was still light, so the killer tried to act as casually as
they could as they locked the front door behind them, then got into their car and drove out of
the neighborhood. Later that night, the killer sat down on the couch in their home, reached into the
bag they had brought to Gary and Jan's house, and took out the item they had stolen from Gary's desk.
It was a jar that was filled with old coins.
The killer wished they could add these coins to their own collection, but instead, the killer would sell these coins as fast as they could.
Mark Porter, Gary's friend and former co-worker, had been the one who murdered Gary and Jan.
It would turn out Mark was in massive debt due to gambling losses and other poor financial decisions.
And weeks before the murder, he had asked his friend Gary to borrow a staggering $250,000.
Gary had been totally stunned by this request.
He thought Mark was doing really well
financially, and he had no idea why Mark would assume that he, Gary, had enough money to just
casually give away $250,000, and so Gary had said no. Mark had said he understood and that he
wouldn't press Gary anymore about the loan, but in reality, Mark had actually decided that he would go into
Gary and Jan's house when Gary was off teaching a class so he could raid Gary's collection himself
for some of his more high-end items and then sell them on the collector's market. Being a coin
collector himself, Mark knew the worth of Gary's very rare coin collection and he also knew the
worth of a lot of the other items Gary had.
So, on April 30th, Mark made his way into Gary and Jan's house to do this robbery.
Investigators don't know if he stole the key he used to get inside, or if maybe Gary and Jan had
given him the key since he was a friend, but either way, that was how he got in with that key.
And so, Mark had entered the house with the intention of just robbing Gary,
but then Gary's wife, Jan, shouted from the basement and suddenly Mark's plan fell apart.
Mark grabbed the walrus tusk and rushed downstairs and beat Jan to death.
But when Mark heard Gary come home, he wasn't sure if the tusk would be enough.
He knew Gary kept a handgun in his desk drawer, so he grabbed it and shot Gary
and then followed it up with smashing him with the Tusk as well.
While investigators had initially considered Jessica their primary suspect, they were
eventually able to place her at a restaurant in Oklahoma City at the time of her parents' murder.
And it turned out that her reasons for not actually going into her parents' house when
she drove all that way to see if they were okay were totally legitimate. When Jessica saw her
parents' cars parked there, when she couldn't get in touch with them and nobody knew what was going
on with them, she really did just have this gut instinct that something horrible had happened to
them and she just could not bear to see it for herself. And so that was why she had not gone in.
So when Jessica was off their suspect list, investigators started digging into the possibility
that someone from the collecting world had killed Gary and Jan like Mark had suggested.
But then Gary's brother realized that a huge stash of rare coins was missing from Gary's office.
And not long after that, police received a call from
a local shop that bought, sold, and traded rare coins. And they had a video of a man who had
recently sold a large coin collection for over $18,000. And the man on that video was Mark Porter.
At this point, detectives Barb and McGamis thought they were close to catching their killer.
But there was still a chance that Mark had simply sold some of his own coins,
so they needed more proof that what he sold was actually Gary's.
They asked Mark to submit a DNA sample to see if maybe they could tie it to DNA found at the scene,
but Mark refused.
So the police sent in an undercover cop to get the DNA sample.
And so it would turn out Mark had every right to be
suspicious of that stranger who had come in and sat down right next to him and chatted with him
while his car was being worked on because that stranger was an undercover police officer who
ultimately left with Mark's coffee cup that he left behind inside. And the crime lab was able
to connect DNA samples from the coffee cup to DNA samples that were found on the latex glove
that had been left behind at the murder scene in the basement near Jan's body.
Finally, Detectives Barb and McCamus learned that the white dust and flakes found near the bodies
had come from a walrus tusk similar to the two they had seen on display at Gary's house,
so they knew what weapon Mark had used to attack and kill Jan, and then also to bludgeon Gary with after he had
shot him.
Mark pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and received two consecutive life sentences.
He'll be eligible for parole after he turns 82 years old.
Jessica was able to speak at Mark Porter's sentencing,
but she refused to put the focus on Mark.
Instead, she focused on her parents,
saying she would miss her parents' advice and their laughter,
and she would miss telling them she loved them.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin Podcast.
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